Right!!! Do not touch them! I think that most of us can agree on the fact that we won’t be handling any porcupines anytime soon. We all know them for their notorious B.A.R.B.’s (bad boy take that take that) but I would suggest that the average person has never given much thought to how beautiful a creature the porcupine actually is. Check out this video I found of this one squeaking like a little cute porcupine!
Yep they make a noise and it much more pleasant than a camel spider, mater of fact if you ever hear a camel spider its probably too late and
you’ve already been bitten. Anyways lol, moving on from that :). Let’s begin with what
we already know.
Porcupines have quills. If you have ever seen the movie "Critters", a porcupine’s quills are large and of course dangerous. The slightest
touch can dislodge them. The quills also have small barbs on them like the
stinger on a bee or like the bark on a fishing hook. This means that if you’re
unfortunate enough to have gotten hooked on a porcupine’s quills that you’re
going to experience a significant amount of trauma removing them.
Here are some other interesting porcupine tidbits. Their
backs aren’t all quills; the quills are mixed with hair. The quills will lay
flat until the porcupine feels threatened and then they are extended to protect
the little critters. Once the quills have come out they grow new ones.
Porcupines are herbivores, in the winter they munch on tree
bark and evergreen needles. In summer they consume things like, grasses, leaves
and dandelions. They have even been known to gnaw on canoe paddles at
campsites. Porcupines are nocturnal and are good swimmers. I am not sure if
that makes them skinny dippers or not, haa whatevs.
Porcupines live in dens, which can range from rock crevices
to hollow logs to crawl spaces under your house. They seem to prefer grasslands
but are equally at home in rocky terrains. The African Crested Porcupine is a
native of Mount Kilimanjaro and has been spotted at elevations as high as 11,000
feet, that’s over 2 miles high.
There are about two-dozen different kinds of porcupines. Timbavati Wildlife Park is home to two different species, The North American Porcupine
and the African Crested Porcupine. I think you get the “Point”. :)
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